Pacific Island children: The use of maps in helping better understand children's lives

IF 1.8 3区 社会学 Q1 AREA STUDIES
Claire Freeman, Anita Latai Niusulu, Christina Ergler, Michelle Schaaf, Tuiloma Susana Taua'a, Helen Tanielu
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Children's voices have been little heard in the Pacific research. The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child 1989 asserts the child's right to have a say on matters that affect them and for their views to be considered. There has been massive growth in technologically assisted participative research; however, we argue the value of hand drawn maps should not be underestimated in the rush to engage with more advanced techniques. We present data from 267 neighbourhood maps drawn by children in Fiji, Kiribati, Samoa and New Zealand. To better understand the social construction of knowledge in children's everyday lives, we propose two models to conceptualise the complexity of their world, a social connection and a spatial connection model. These models reveal how Pacific Island children negotiate different levels of social connection from home, family, and community through to transnational kinship relations. People, specifically family, provide the geographic basis on which their spatial encounters are overlaid. Irrespective of country or rural/urban/atoll setting, it is social space that is the strongest connector for children as displayed in their maps. Application of our models can be used to reveal how knowledge is socially constructed in Pacific children's everyday lives.

Abstract Image

太平洋岛屿儿童:利用地图帮助更好地了解儿童的生活
在太平洋研究中,儿童的声音很少被听到。1989年《联合国儿童权利公约》主张儿童有权对影响他们的事项发表意见,并要求考虑他们的意见。在技术协助下的参与性研究方面有了巨大的增长;然而,我们认为,在急于采用更先进的技术时,不应低估手绘地图的价值。我们展示了来自斐济、基里巴斯、萨摩亚和新西兰儿童绘制的267幅社区地图的数据。为了更好地理解儿童日常生活中知识的社会建构,我们提出了两个模型来概念化他们世界的复杂性,一个是社会联系模型,一个是空间联系模型。这些模型揭示了太平洋岛国儿童是如何从家庭、家庭和社区到跨国亲属关系来协商不同层次的社会联系的。人,特别是家庭,提供了他们空间相遇的地理基础。无论国家或农村/城市/环礁环境如何,社交空间都是儿童在地图上显示的最强大的纽带。我们的模型的应用可以用来揭示知识是如何在太平洋儿童的日常生活中社会建构的。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.80
自引率
9.50%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: Asia Pacific Viewpoint is a journal of international scope, particularly in the fields of geography and its allied disciplines. Reporting on research in East and South East Asia, as well as the Pacific region, coverage includes: - the growth of linkages between countries within the Asia Pacific region, including international investment, migration, and political and economic co-operation - the environmental consequences of agriculture, industrial and service growth, and resource developments within the region - first-hand field work into rural, industrial, and urban developments that are relevant to the wider Pacific, East and South East Asia.
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